News
Post Salon: City Needs Jobs Policy That Overturns Discrimination in Hiring
Adopt a policy that benefits everyone, not just side agreement with Building Trades, say speakers
The Post Salon Community Assembly last Sunday addressed the critical need to create opportunities for decent jobs at decent wages for Black workers, seeking to ramp-up community efforts to end discrimination against African-Americans on city-funded building projects.
The panel of speakers included City Councilmembers Desley Brooks and Rebecca Kaplan; Pete Varma, president of the National Association of Minority Contractors, Northern CA Chapter; Miguel Galarza, president of Yerba Buena Engineering & Construction; and Dexter Vizinau, president of CyberTran International and member of OaklandWORKS.
Recent statistics show that African Americans get only 9 percent of the hours on city-funded construction projects, though they make up 27 percent of the Oakland’s population. At the same time, the official unemployment rate for African Americans stands at 7.7 percent, almost double the rate for whites.
Within this context, some City Council members are considering proposals to pass a Project Labor Agreement (PLA) with the Building Trades, which means the city would sign a contract guaranteeing that nearly all jobs on city-funded projects would go through the unions and union hiring halls, which have few or no Black members in building trades unions.
Councilmember Brooks said that Project Labor Agreements have a bad track record when it comes to equity.
“We should not tinker at the margins,” she said. “PLAs have not worked for communities of color, particularly for Black folks. We can ill afford not to have jobs for people in this community.
“The city has the ability with its own money to ensure people in this community have jobs.”
Mayor Libby Schaaf has advocated signing a PLA, and another proposal is being developed by Councilmember Abel Guillén, according to Councilmember Kaplan.
The building trades—locally and nationally—have for years resisted publically releasing the ethnic breakdown of their membership.
According to many people familiar with the construction trades in the Bay Area, African Americans are excluded. There are larger numbers of Latinos in lower-paid trades, such as the Laborers Union.
But many of the other more highly paid trades are almost exclusively white, such as Glaziers, Electricians, Plumbers, Elevator Technicians and others.
At present, most Black workers in construction are hired by small, non-union contractors who are Black. As Black contractors are forced out and existing ones are forced to hire through the union hiring halls, Black workers become more and more scarce.
The elite craft unions exclude people of color, said Galarza, who works on equity issues in construction in San Francisco and San Jose.
“Electricians at $70 an hour plumbers at $80 an hour, you will not find people of color in those unions,” he said.
Galarza said that equity amendments were approved by the City Council in San Jose, but the building trades refused to sign the amended PLA.
In San Francisco, the building trades walked away from a million-dollar construction project because they would have been required by a Consent Decree to release the ethnic composition of the unions, he said.
Vizinau said Black contractors are disappearing.
“There used to be a lot of Black contractors in Oakland,” he said. “We built downtown. Now, I can’t find more than five (Black contractors).”
“Proposition 209 did away with affirmative action. That was the beginning of the decline.”
Passed in 1996, Prop. 209 was a California ballot proposition that amended the state constitution to prohibit state governmental institutions from considering race, sex, or ethnicity in the areas of public employment, public contracting and public education.
“I am not anti-union,” continued Vizinau. “I know what unions can do and what they should represent. We just have to get them there.”
Councilmember Kaplan said the city has the responsibility to ensure that “jobs and contracts are provided fairly throughout the community.”
She said she supports “ban the box” so the formerly incarcerated can be hired on city-funded construction projects. She also backed Councilmember Brooks’ proposal to use city funds to support pre-apprenticeship training programs, like Cypress Mandela Job Training center
“There has to be money for pre-apprenticeship,” said Kaplan. “There has to be access to pathway to these jobs.”
Varma said minority contractors are not at the table when developers and contractors decide who is going to do the work.
“There’s a huge problem,” he said. The people with the money and are jobs are “not talking to minority contractors, they are not talking to small contactors—who need work.”
An action proposal came out of the meeting:
City officials should work with the community to develop a fair jobs policy, which the city should adopt instead of signing a PLA.
A new city policy can incorporate the “good” parts a PLA that protect workers’ rights, as well as protect the the rights of African Americans, women and other groups: The Building Trades unions must release their membership by ethnicity and adopt concrete goals for improving equity.
Ask the city’s Department of Race and Equity to mprepare a report on the equity implications of the various jobs policies.
Utilize the results of a long-awaited Disparity Study to pinpoint policies that will level the playing field for small minority and women-businesses that seek contracts.
Activism
Oakland Post: Week of April 24 – 30, 2024
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of April 24 – 30, 2024
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Oakland Post: Week of April 17 – 23, 2024
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of April 17 – 23, 2024
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California Black Media
Yahushua’s Law: Senate Advances Bill to Protect Students from Extreme Weather
In a significant move towards student safety, the California Senate Education Committee passed Senate Bill (SB) 1248, also known as Yahushua’s Law, on April 3. The bill is named in memory of Yahushua Robinson, a 12-year-old student from Lake Elsinore, who tragically died due to a heat-related illness during a physical education class in 2023. It is a pioneering effort to prevent similar incidents in the future.
By California Black Media
In a significant move towards student safety, the California Senate Education Committee passed Senate Bill (SB) 1248, also known as Yahushua’s Law, on April 3.
The bill is named in memory of Yahushua Robinson, a 12-year-old student from Lake Elsinore, who tragically died due to a heat-related illness during a physical education class in 2023. It is a pioneering effort to prevent similar incidents in the future.
Authored by Senator Melissa Hurtado (D-Bakersfield) and co-authored by Assemblymember Akilah Weber, M.D. (D-La Mesa), SB 1248 directs the California Department of Education to develop comprehensive guidelines for schools regarding student activity during all extreme weather conditions.
“No student should ever lose their life on campus to extreme weather when we can take steps to protect them by preparing statewide plans to minimize exposure to the most harmful elements of exposure,” Hurtado said after introducing SB 1248.
The bill stipulates that schools must implement safety measures which include monitoring weather forecasts, postponing or relocating outdoor activities during hazardous conditions, and ensuring students have proper hydration and access to shade. It also requires schools to establish clear communication plans to keep parents, teachers, and students informed about potential weather hazards.
Supporters of the bill include the Robinson family, advocate Christina Laster, Bold Enterprises LLC, California Black Women’s Collective Empowerment Institute, Familias Empoderadas del Valle Central National Action Network, The Black Student Advocate, and the Ventura County Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority.
Thanking Hurtado for introducing this crucial legislation, Weber said, “The story of Yahushua Robinson last year was heartbreaking. We have protections for farm workers and other industries in the case of extreme weather, now climate change is forcing us to also extend similar protections to students at school.”
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